4.1 Article

A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study of a Large Clinical Cohort of Children With Tourette Syndrome

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHILD NEUROLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 5, Pages 560-569

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0883073810387928

Keywords

Tourette syndrome; functional magnetic resonance imaging; comorbidity

Funding

  1. Lundbeck Foundation
  2. Egmont Foundation
  3. Copenhagen County's Research Foundation
  4. Ludvig and Sara Elsass Foundation
  5. Carpenter Jorgen Holm and wife Elisa born Hansens Memorial Foundation
  6. Butcher Worzner and Wife Worzner's Memorial Foundation
  7. Dagmar Marshalls Foundation
  8. Professor Torben Iversen's Traveling Foundation for young pediatricians
  9. Beatrice Surovell Haskell Foundation for Child Mental Health Research of Copenhagen

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There is evidence that cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical pathways are involved in the pathophysiology of Tourette syndrome. During the performance of neuropsychological tests in subjects with Tourette syndrome there are suggestions for increased activity in the sensimotor cortex, supplementary motor areas, and frontal cortex. To replicate findings, the authors examined 22 medication-naive children with Tourette syndrome only, 17 medication-naive children with Tourette syndrome and comorbidity, and 39 healthy controls with functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). There were no differences in activation in brain regions between the children with Tourette syndrome (divided according to the presence of comorbidity) and healthy controls after correction for the confounders age, sex, and intelligence. Activation in the cingulated gyrus, temporal gyrus, and medial frontal gyrus was correlated significantly with obsessive-compulsive disorder score. The authors did not find significant correlations between activation patterns and age, sex, duration of disease, intelligence, severity of tics, and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) score.

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